Tue Sep 02, 2014 11:47 am
The single biggest advantage of an alternator is that it puts out a whole lot more power at slower rpm, which can be pretty important if a night time taxi is very long after a lengthy low power approach. A generator puts out very little power at idle. In addition to landing lights, one of the other major power draws comes from a heated pitot. For instance, I can recall years ago, taxiing in at old Denver Stapleton to Combs-Gates in our Skylane, and having the radios go silent because the lengthy approach with the pitot heat and landing/taxi lights on plus the long taxi with the landing/taxi lights on had run the battery down below what the radios needed to operate. An alternator at idle rpm will put out good charging power.
When I bought my 63 P172D 10 1/2 years ago, I threw a rod in only 15 flight hours and landed in a field. While it was in for the new engine, I had an alternator conversion done (there were several possibilities--Plane Power didn't exist yet). So I have a 65 amp alternator, which is totally capable of covering all of my airplane's power needs plus charge the battery. I have a full IFR panel (steam gauge), heated pitot and heated AOA probe, HID landing/taxi lights, wingtip strobes, and a tail strobe, plus the normal navigation lights. The HID lights draw less power than standard incandescent lights and the tail strobe draws less power than the former rotating beacon did, but the alternator could handle it if I had stock lights.
In addition to being able to handle all of the power needs while taxiing or in flight, an alternator will recharge the battery after starting in cold weather, much more quickly.
None of that answers whether you should replace your generator right away. But if I were to buy another old airplane, I'd make it a priority, based on my personal experience. When my IA and I first discussed the alternator conversion, it was an easy decision to make. My only question was "how much?" Because he also changed out the fuse panel and replaced it with a custom circuit breaker panel and did some other electrical changes, the total came to about $1500--totally worth it. A straight conversion without other changes should be less.
Cary